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Journal Article

Citation

Lu LH, Reid MW, Cooper DB, Kennedy JE. NeuroRehabilitation 2019; 44(4): 511-521.

Affiliation

General Dynamics Information Technology, San Antonio, TX, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, IOS Press)

DOI

10.3233/NRE-192702

PMID

31256090

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many with a history of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) experience sleep problems, which are also common symptoms of stress-related and mood disorders.

OBJECTIVE: To determine if sleep problems contributed unique variance to post-concussive symptoms above and beyond symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder/major depressive disorder (PTSD/MDD) after mild TBI.

METHODS: 313 active duty service members with a history of mild TBI completed sleep, PTSD, and mood symptom questionnaires, which were used to determine contributions to the Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory.

RESULTS: 59% of the variance in post-concussive symptoms were due to PTSD symptom severity while depressive symptoms and sleep problems contributed an additional 1% each. This pattern differed between those with and without clinical diagnosis of PTSD/MDD. For those with PTSD/MDD, PTSD and depression symptoms but not sleep contributed to post-concussive symptoms. For those without PTSD/MDD, PTSD symptoms and sleep contributed specifically to somatosensory post-concussive symptoms. Daytime dysfunction and sleep disturbances were associated with post-concussive symptoms after PTSD and depression symptoms were controlled.

CONCLUSIONS: PTSD symptom severity explained the most variance for post-concussive symptoms among service members with a history of mild TBI, while depression symptoms, daytime dysfunction, and sleep disturbances independently contributed small amounts of variance.


Language: en

Keywords

Concussion; blast; combat; dysthymia; insomnia; primary care; psychiatry; sleep apnea; sports; stress

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